In fact, roughly 600,000 people visit the park each year. The only national park in the US named after a person, Theodore Roosevelt not only preserves and protects vast areas of grasslands ...
Each tribe has a unique history, spirituality and tradition with the badlands. The national park protects more than 70,000 acres of these sacred lands, iconic wildlife and unique rock structures.
Long before Theodore Roosevelt became America’s 26th president, he spent years as a rancher in the rugged lands preserved by this national park. He grew a strong attachment to the landscape, and now ...
Wild horse advocates will also seek a resolution from the North Dakota Legislature urging federal protection for the horses.
He spent 14 days camping, fishing, and sightseeing. After two weeks in the Park, he rode the same gray horse to the gateway ...
There are more National Park Service units dedicated to Roosevelt's life and memory than any other American. As a sickly young boy in New York City, Theodore Roosevelt learned taxidermy and ...
Fifteen years later, when Congress again refused to create a national park, President Theodore Roosevelt stretched the limits of the Antiquities Act and established the Grand Canyon National Monument.